297 



species I subsequently named neglectus. In addition to being- 

 referred to a wrong genus, the description of the antennae and 

 prothorax is misleading. 



Mandalotus. 



The number of species still to be described in this highly 

 interesting genus of dingy weevils must be enormous. 

 Although several new species were dealt with in these Trans- 

 actions as recently as 1912 (pp. 76-80), eleven have now to 

 be described, three species of which were obtained (two in 

 considerable numbers) from a few square yards covered with 

 fallen leaves at Mount Tambourine. Several others are also 

 known to me, but their representatives being dirty or abraded 

 they were not described, as they belong to the section of the 

 genus without remarkable processes on the sterna or abdomen ; 

 a few also are not in South Australian collections. Many 

 nnmated females are also known to me, but, unless very dis- 

 tinctive, it is not desirable to name a species in the genus 

 from females only. 



Since my first table of the genus (1907, pp. 131-135) 

 so many new forms have been named that a fresh one 

 is desirable, especially as the positions of some of the species 

 there noted were fixed in error, only their females being then 

 known. The present table deals exclusively with males, ex- 

 cept that two species, interocularis and carter i, are dis- 

 tinguished, inter se, by their females. 



